# Rule testers stylelint rules require *a lot* of tests. So we've built a specialized stylelint rule testing format to speed up the mass production of consistent, effective rule tests. There is a schema for describing tests, and a function for creating "rule testers" that interpret that schema using a test framework (e.g. tape or Mocha). When developing plugins, you can use the following rule testers or create your own. - stylelint-test-rule-tape - stylelint-test-rule-mocha - stylelint-test-rule-ava ## Using a rule tester To use the rule tester of your choice, do the following: ```js // `testRule` = the imported rule tester testRule(rule, testGroupDescription) ``` `rule` is just the rule that you are testing (a function). `testGroupDescription` is an object fitting the following schema. ### The test group schema Each test group object describes a set of test-cases for a certain rule with a certain configuration. Required properties: - `ruleName` {string}: The name of the rule. Used in generated test-case descriptions. - `config` {any}: The rule's configuration for this test group. Should match the rule configuration format you'd use in `.stylelintrc`. - `accept` {array}: An array of objects describing test cases that *should not violate the rule*. Each object has these properties: - `code` {string}: The source CSS to check. - `description` {string}: *Optional.* A description of the case. - `only` {boolean}: If `true`, run only this test case. - `reject` {array}: An array of objects describing test cases that *should violate the rule once*. Each object has these properties: - `code` {string}: The source CSS to check. - `message` {string}: The message of the expected violation. - `line` {number}: *Optional but recommended.* The expected line number of the violation. If this is left out, the line won't be checked. - `column` {number}: *Optional but recommended.* The expected column number of the violation. If this is left out, the column won't be checked. - `description` {string}: *Optional.* A description of the case. - `only` {boolean}: If `true`, run only this test case. Optional properties: - `syntax` {"css"|"less"|"scss"|"sugarss"}: Defaults to `"css"`. Other settings use special parsers. - `skipBasicChecks` {boolean}: Defaults to `false`. If `true`, a few rudimentary checks (that should almost always be included) will not be performed. You can check those out in `lib/testUtils/basicChecks.js`. - `preceedingPlugins` {array}: An array of PostCSS plugins that should be run before the CSS is tested. ## Creating a rule tester stylelint itself exposes a means of creating rule testers with just about any testing framework. ```js var testRule = stylelint.createRuleTester(equalityCheck) ``` Pass in an `equalityCheck` function. Given some information, this checker should use whatever test runner you like to perform equality checks. The `equalityCheck` function should accept two arguments: - `processCss` {Promise}: A Promise that resolves with an array of comparisons that you need to check (documented below). - `context` {object}: An object that contains additional information you may need: - `caseDescription` {string}: A description of the test case as whole. It will end up printing like something this: ```bash > rule: value-list-comma-space-before > config: "always-single-line" > code: "a { background-size: 0 ,0;\n}" ``` - `comparisonCount` {number}: The number of comparisons that will need to be performed (e.g. useful for tape). - `completeAssertionDescription` {string}: While each individual comparison may have its own description, this is a description of the whole assertion (e.g. useful for Mocha). - `only` {boolean}: If `true`, the test runner should only run this test case (e.g. `test.only` in tape, `describe.only` in Mocha). `processCss` is a Promise that resolves with an array of comparisons. Each comparison has the following properties: - `actual` {any}: Some actual value. - `expected` {any}: Some expected value. - `description` {string}: A (possibly empty) description of the comparison. Within the `equalityCheck` function, you need to ensure that you do the following: - Set up the test case. - When `processCss` resolves, loop through every comparison. - For each comparison, make an assertion checking that `actual === expected`. A `testRule` function (as described above) is returned.